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Ex-U Coach: ‘Great Draw’ for Gophers

Posted on March 18, 2013March 18, 2013 by David Shama

 

Former Gophers basketball coach Jim Dutcher predicts Minnesota will defeat UCLA on Friday in its NCAA Tournament opening game in Austin, Texas.  “The Gophers got a great draw,” Dutcher told Sports Headliners last night.

The Gophers have struggled against teams effective on the inside but that’s not the Bruins.  “They’re not a physical team, and the big advantage Minnesota’s got is their best perimeter player broke his foot in the conference tournament against Arizona,” Dutcher said.  “Jordan Adams, he’s their second leading scorer.  He’s by far their best three-point shooter.”

Dutcher believes the Gophers are not only more physical than UCLA but also deeper.  “Their depth is really suspect,” he said.

UCLA’s games often involve scores in the 70s and beyond, a contrast to the low scoring, grind down the shot clock style Minnesota encountered in the Big Ten Conference.  “You’ll get chances (against UCLA) to score on the open floor,” Dutcher said.  “You’ll get some open looks from the perimeter.  I think style wise it’s really an excellent draw for Minnesota.”

Dutcher not only believes Minnesota will win the game but when prompted he predicted the score.  “I say the Gophers 77, UCLA 67.”

The Bruins, Pac-12 regular season champions with an overall 25-9 record, received a major upgrade in talent this season from their incoming freshmen led by two guards, Adams (15.3 average) and Shabazz Muhammad, the team’s leading scorer at 17.8.  Redshirt junior forward Travis Wear is the team’s other double figures scorer at 11.2 points per game.

The Bruins lost 78-69 to Oregon in the Pac-12 Tournament title game last week.  It was UCLA’s second loss to the Ducks this year.  Dutcher pointed out that Oregon is a No. 12 seed in the Midwest Region while the Bruins are a No. 6 seed in the South Region.

The Gophers, the No. 11 seed in the South with an overall 20-12 record, have lost three consecutive games.  They have won only five games since January 9 while UCLA has 13 wins during the same period.  But, as Dutcher said, this game could be about styles and UCLA being without a key player in Adams.

If the Gophers defeat the Bruins, their opponent Sunday will almost certainly be No. 3 seed Florida.  Dutcher believes the Gators will be too much for Minnesota.  “There’s a reason they’re No. 3.  They’re a good solid basketball team.”

Dutcher’s Final Four predictions?  His choices are Louisville, New Mexico, Kansas and Syracuse.  He likes Kansas to win the national championship on April 8 in Atlanta, praising Bill Self’s tournament coaching skills, plus the experience and talent of the players.  “I just think they’ve got a lot going for them,” Dutcher said.

Dutcher and some other college basketball experts are leaving the Big Ten out of Final Four predictions despite the league’s reputation during the season of being the nation’s best conference.  Dutcher doesn’t discredit the league’s overall strength but he likes the chances of other teams more.

Indiana, Dutcher said, is the Big Ten team most likely to reach Atlanta.  “They’re a good team but they’re not a dominant team.”

Dutcher said the Hoosiers, Big Ten regular season champs, don’t have “big man depth” behind center Cody Zeller and that’s a problem in pursuing a national title.  “They need Zeller to play a great game for them to win, and when he’s good, they’re good.” Dutcher said.  “You saw at Williams Arena when he’s not good, they’re not as good. …”

In the highlight moment of their season, the Gophers defeated then No. 1 ranked Indiana, 77-73, on February 26.  Minnesota’s only win since has been against lowly Penn State, beating the Nittany Lions, 73-44, on Senior Day March 2.

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Flip’s Tweets Draw Attention to Gophers

Posted on March 15, 2013March 15, 2013 by David Shama

 

What’s up with Flip Saunders’ tweets yesterday during and after the Gophers game?

The former Gophers guard and assistant coach had plenty to say about Minnesota’s performance including sharing his expertise on lack of execution.  Saunders wasn’t critical of individuals but his passion for the Gophers was obvious.

Was it all the emotion of a U alum? Or was it more?  Flip followers think the unemployed former NBA coach has interest in the Gophers if there is a job opening.

His resume is loaded with pluses including popularity with the fan base, Gophers donors and media. And this is one guy that doesn’t come with a costly buyout involving his former employer.  During a year of coaching unemployment Saunders has stayed close to basketball on the college and pro levels, and even the Minnesota high school scene.

Meanwhile, the Gophers will learn on Sunday if they can back their way into an NCAA Tournament invitation after losing eight of their last 11 games and turning up the heat on embattled coach Tubby Smith.  The Gophers, 20-12 after losing 51-49 to Illinois in the Big Ten Tournament yesterday, are still a likely selection for the NCAA Tournament because of the difficult schedule the team has played and its high RPI ranking.

But if the perspective is about recent results and appearances, this is a team that has doused plenty of public enthusiasm concerning postseason play.  Minnesota has lost three consecutive games and only won five times since January 9 when the Gophers were 15-1.  And the way Minnesota has often played has to cause doubt among the players and coach.

Smith was asked before yesterday’s game if the Gophers might have renewed energy with the regular season over and about to open play in the Big Ten Tournament.  “That’s a good question,” Smith said on 1500 ESPN.  “This team has been hard to read all year long.  I would like to think so.  We’ve got a lot to play for. …But again, we’ve had many opportunities before.”

Minnesota said no to its latest opportunity, displaying both energy and focus that faded in and out.  In a 49-49 tie and possession of the ball with about 16 seconds remaining in the game, the Gophers turned the ball over when guard Austin Hollins stepped out of bounds.  Illinois’ Brandon Paul then made a jump shot as the game ended to defeat Minnesota.

The Gophers self-destructed at the end just as they had earlier in the game and so many times during the last two months.  The team’s turnovers prompted BTN play-by-play man Gus Johnson to say early in the second half:  “Minnesota just looks sloppy from top to bottom.”

Eleven first half turnovers (19 total yesterday) played a significant role in changing an early 7-2 Minnesota lead into the Illini pushing ahead 19-12 with about six minutes remaining in the period.  Austin Hollins had scored five of the first seven points in the first half and was moving effectively without the ball.  Center Trevor Mbakwe was a brute on the boards.  But after seven minutes both players were on the bench with two personals each.

Hollins and Mbakwe were grounded for the rest of the half.  Their presence almost certainly would have lifted a team that has often been in free fall in past weeks, and one that was stumbling again yesterday.  Why not risk the possibility of more fouls on either or both players?

Instead the Gophers played without Mbawke and Hollins while missing defensive assignments that twice allowed Illini players to race down the lane without being guarded.  Offensively, Minnesota was even more of a mess in the first half, often passing up shots, and playing indecisively with ineffective player and ball movement.

The Gophers reverted to other bad habits including botched efforts to inbound the ball underneath the basket or on the sideline. An early second half pass thrown by guard Joe Coleman was intercepted and resulted in a three-point goal by Illinois that slowed Minnesota’s momentum.

Behind the scoring of Mbawke, Austin Hollins and point guard Andre Hollins the Gophers made a comeback in the second half after trailing 25-16 at halftime.  The Gophers built leads by as many as five points.

But Minnesota couldn’t’ score a field goal in the last five minutes and wasted an opportunity to win.  The defeat adds to the criticism directed at Smith who in six years has yet to produce a winning record during the Big Ten regular season, or win an NCAA Tournament game.

But he is likely to have an opportunity to win his first “Big Dance” game next week.

Worth Noting

Don’t be surprised if in a couple of years beer is sold to the public at Williams Arena and Mariucci Arena, following the trend started last fall at TCF Bank Stadium.  A majority of state legislative leaders might support the additional beer sales and the change will increase athletic department revenues.

Also ahead is a likely Big Ten schedule where each conference football team plays nine or 10 league games.  A nine game schedule means in alternate years a school plays four or five home conference games.

Asked on WCCO Radio Wednesday morning about the future of basketball coach Tubby Smith, Gophers athletic director Norwood Teague said Smith is “ensconced” in his work.

New University of Tennessee football coach Butch Jones will speak at the Minnesota Football Clinic on Thursday, April 4 at the DoubleTree Hotel in St. Louis Park.  North Dakota State national championship coach Craig Bohl will also speak on Thursday as part of the three-day clinic.  Coaches interesting in registering for the clinic can Google Minnesota Football Clinic and find the link for more information.

The Vikings will choose Tennessee wide receiver Cordarrelle Patterson with the No. 23 pick in the first round of the NFL draft next month, according to Joe Dove’s Bleacherreport.com NFL mock draft posted on Wednesday.  At No. 25, using the first round pick acquired in the Percy Harvin trade with the Seahawks, the Vikings will select Kansas State inside linebacker Arthur Brown.

Other names of wide receivers you may see on mock draft listings are DeAndre Hopkins, Clemson; Keenan Allen, California; and Tavon Austin, West Virginia.

The Chicago Tribune’s Dan Pompei, writing for a March 9 online story about Marc Trestman, points out how fickle the coaching profession can be.  Trestman, the former Gophers quarterback and Vikings assistant coach, has been fired seven times during his pro and college coaching career.  At 57 he has his first NFL head coaching job with the Bears.  In the story Trestman talks about how he values players as more than athletes.

Tommy Hannon — the St. Thomas All-MIAC and All-Region senior center who has already played for one Division III Tommies national championship team and is trying to win another — could have given up on his basketball career after being cut from the Cretin-Derham Hall team as a junior.

“I was so out of shape then,” Hannon said.  “I was 6-foot-2 and weighed about 235. After I was cut from the team as a junior, I played intramurals. I also started working out a lot, and got myself in shape. I lost 35 pounds or so and grew three or four inches.”

Hannon, now 6-foot-7, 210, keeps a picture in his wallet from his junior year to “remind me where I once was.”  Hannon and his teammates play Calvin (Michigan) at home on Saturday starting at 7 p.m.  The matchup will be a Sweet 16 Division III playoff game between the 28-1 Tommies and 26-3 Calvin.

Timberwolves center Nikola Pekovic will sign autographs on Sunday, April 14 from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. at the Valley West Mall in Bloomington. The Sports Card Show is a two-day event (April 13-14) and is organized by the Twin Cities Sports Collectors Club.  Club members receive a discount on autographs.

Fox Sports North will televise the Twins-Red Sox game beginning at 6 p.m. Minneapolis time tonight.  Other Fox North Sports telecasts from spring training will be March 21, 23, 24, 25 and 28.

It’s been a winning sports winter at Edina High School where the boys’ hockey team won an 11th state title, the girls’ hockey team placed third in the state tourney, the boys’ swimming team finished second at state, and the boys’ basketball team has advanced to next week’s state tournament.

Comments Welcome

Tourney Authority Not Ruling U Out

Posted on March 13, 2013March 13, 2013 by David Shama

 

Sources, including a former member of the NCAA Tournament selection committee, believe the Gophers might need a win in this week’s Big Ten Tournament to be included in the NCAA’s field of 68 teams.

McKinley Boston, the former Gophers athletic director, served on the selection committee for several years.  During an interview with Sports Headliners, he labeled the Gophers, 20-11 overall and 8-10 during the Big Ten regular season, a “bubble team.”

The Gophers have stunned their followers after a 15-1 start that included nonconference wins over Memphis, Stanford and Florida State, and Big Ten Conference victories in their first three league games against Michigan State and Northwestern at home and Illinois on the road.  Since January 9, Minnesota has won five games, losing 10.  The Gophers are 4-6 in their last 10 games, including two consecutive losses.  Their league road record is 1-8.

Boston, now athletic director at New Mexico State, was asked about how the selection committee views teams that stumble late in the season.  “Well, that was one of the things that the committee looked at.  How was your record in the last 10 games?  Were you hot?  Were you faltering?

“It’s not a good thing that they’re not finishing strong (the Gophers), but at the same time you can’t dismiss the strength of the league this year. That’s going to carry a lot of weight.”

Many authorities who rank college basketball conferences — like Teamrankings.com — have the Big Ten No. 1.  The league has four teams in the A.P. top 10 and five in the top 25 this week.

And then as every “March Madness” expert knows, the selection committee uses the Ratings Percentage Index (the famous RPI) as prime criteria in deciding who is invited to the NCAA Tournament and who is rejected.  There are five Big Ten teams among the top 25 in the latest RPI listings from CBSsports.com including the Gophers at No. 24.  Statistically, Minnesota’s strength of schedule ranks near the top nationally.

Although Minnesota finished in a three-way tie for seventh place in the Big Ten, the Gophers are ahead in the RPI rankings of No. 41 Wisconsin even though the Badgers were 12-6 in league games and tied for fourth in the standings.  Illinois, a team that tied the Gophers along with Purdue for seventh place in the Big Ten, has a No. 43 ranking.

The Illini, the No. 8 Big Ten Tournament seed, and the Gophers, the No. 9 seed, split two games during the regular season.  Minnesota won at Illinois, 84-67, while the Illini were winners in Minneapolis, 57-53.

It’s possible — perhaps even likely — that regardless of who wins tomorrow’s game, both Illinois and Minnesota will make the tournament.  Eamonn Brennan, writing yesterday for ESPN.com, believes both schools probably will be invited when the tourney selections are announced on Sunday.  “Odds are the Gophers will back their way into this thing.  But it’s not like they’ve been convincing in doing so,” he wrote.

Worth Noting

Gophers coach Tubby Smith wasn’t happy with his defense in 53-51 and 89-73 road losses to Nebraska and Purdue last week.  “This is probably the worst defensive team we’ve had, to be honest with you,” Smith said on Saturday during his postgame show on 1500 ESPN.  “That’s disappointing — to have five seniors and still have the worst defensive team we’ve had.”

Smith has coached the Gophers for six seasons and his regular season Big Ten record is 46-62.  This season’s seventh place finish in the league standings follows 10th and 9th place finishes the two previous years.  None of his teams have placed higher than sixth in the Big Ten or won more than nine games in a league season.

Sid Hartman, the Star Tribune and WCCO Radio personality, has defended Smith and said the coach won’t be let go after this season.  But Hartman said on WUCW’s “Sports Show” on Sunday night that Smith needs to have a winning team next season.

The name often speculated upon as Smith’s successor is VCU’s Shaka Smart but he may prefer to wait for an opening at one of the nation’s premier programs.  His name is rumored with the job at UCLA, arguably still college basketball’s most storied program.

This is the 75th year of the men’s NCAA Basketball Tournament.  Sports Illustrated, in its March 6 issue, picked the 10 players the magazine believes were the “best performers” in tourney history: Lew Alcindor was No. 1 followed by Bill Walton, Bill Russell, Oscar Robertson, Larry Bird, Wilt Chamberlain, Bill Bradley, Magic Johnson, Christian Laettner and Jerry West.

Former Gophers athletic director McKinley Boston, now AD at New Mexico State, expects the 2013 Aggies football team to be better than the group that defeated Minnesota, 28-21, at TCF Bank Stadium in 2011.  Boston said the Aggies have “more overall team speed” than the team that upset Minnesota two years ago.

The Aggies will open their season on August 31 at Texas before hosting the Gophers on September 7.  Boston didn’t have the exact figure but believes his school will receive about $900,000 for playing the Longhorns.

Kickoff time for the Gophers game in Las Cruces will be 6 p.m. (daylight Mountain time).  Boston predicted temperatures in the ”mid-90s” and possible rain.

The Aggies are a college football independent now and have a home game next season against Boston College.  Former Gopher player DeWayne Walker left his job in January as New Mexico State’s head coach to become an assistant with the NFL Jaguars.  Ex-Kent State head coach Doug Martin, who was offensive coordinator in the Aggies’ win in Minneapolis, is now head coach at New Mexico State.

A story yesterday on the International Business Times website listed the Seahawks — following the Percy Harvin trade with the Vikings — as 8-1 favorites to win the 2014 Super Bowl.  The Patriots are 6-1, 49ers 7-1 and Broncos 8-1 favorites while the Vikings are 50-1.

Rookie Aaron Hicks, who already has Twins fans excited to see him during the regular season as the team’s new center fielder, leads the club in spring training home runs with four although he never hit more than 13 in five minor league seasons.  Hicks, who is hitting .371 this spring and also leads in RBI with 13, led all Twins minor leaguers last season in stolen bases with 32 playing for New Britain.

Tom Windle, the former Osseo all-stater who last Saturday threw the first nine inning no-hitter for the Gophers since 1933, was an academic All-Big Ten choice last season as a sophomore.  During his freshman season he made the Big Ten All-Tournament team after pitching eight scoreless innings and striking out six.

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